Archive for June, 2009

Warning! The media system on your computer is corrupt.

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

No, probably not. This fake alert most likely has to do with the streamviewer exe that you downloaded and ran.

We’ve been monitoring a FakeAv/Koobface/spyware delivery scheme, and today the group dropped their standard FakeAv moneymaker and added a set of phony codec gimmickry to their back of tricks, redirecting the user’s browser to v-s-codecpro.com/purchase.php?code=, all while popping scareware messages about corrupt sound and video codecs. See the prompt in the lower right hand corner here:


The codecs on your system are most likely not corrupted, they were not corrupted on our infected lab system.

Streamviewer’s .gif Images Embedded with Encrypted Malware

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Our post last week warned on a group moving their FakeAv-Koobface-Vundo-Spyware “softwarefortubeview” phony codec downloader to a new home last week, and this week, we are examining a similar scheme that downloads, surprise, surprise, Koobface, FakeAv prompting BHOs like iehelper.dll’s prompts for “Antivirus system PRO”, performs some level of click fraud, installs podmena.dll and podmena.sys…this one also includes a nice ftp credential stealing component, stealing passwords from FileZilla, Coffee Cup, FTP Control, CuteFtp and more.

Streamviewer.40050.exe (and other streamviewer + random version names) has been flying off the shelf at a server on 64.20.38.171. That ip hosts multiple badware domains:
go-exe-go.com
reverse38-170.reserver.ru
gruzzilla.com
hot-exe-area.com
last-exe-portal.com
main-exe-home.com
super-exe-home.com

Interesting about the downloader is the way in which additional malware is downloaded and dropped by this phony codec. It contacts a set of servers with encoded data about the system.
reportsystem32.com (216.240.146.119)
terradataweb.com (66.199.229.229)
dvdisorapid.com (64.27.5.202)
superimagesart.com (95.211.8.61)
thenewpic.com (66.148.80.4)

It then pulls out data from a decoded xml file containing a list of urls to contact for a variety of .gif images (titem.gif, qwerce.gif, 217.gif, etc).
superimagesart.com
thenewpic.com
stockshopimages.com
imagesoffline.com
theimagesphoto.com
imageheadphones.com

At the time of download, gif viewers will display titem.gif with a political message about french politician Christine Boutin:

Know that we do not endorse any political message with this post. But this gif image is no ordinary image. If it were, its size might reach 35 kb at the most. Embedded in the image is the encrypted payload, bloating the image out over a couple hundred kilobytes (~270 kb).
The downloader gathers the response information from the previous sites to find more urls to contact and finds its decryption key. It then uses its key to decrypt the code embedded within downloaded gifs.

Much like the recent (and possibly related) beladen downloader and the older Tibs downloaders, this malware delivery embedded image scheme attempts to evade gateway appliance based protection and optimized AV scans with gif-based encrypted payloads. It stymies automated web crawling based research efforts. No longer are we seeing simple xor decoding schemes with visible PE headers in downloaded image files. The encryption implemented for this attack was another previously commerical and proprietary encryption algorithm.
ThreatFire is preventing this downloader in fairly high prevalence.

Patch Tuesday

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

It is Patch Tuesday and Microsoft posted another ten bulletins for their Windows platform and Office applications — be sure to update, six of the ten are rated “critical” or “pwn me”. Four of the patches address holes in client side targets like Internet Explorer, Word, Excel, and a Works converter. Visiting the site results in over 30 high priority patch installs for many systems.
Where do you want to go today — head on over to the Microsoft update site.